LordKOTL
Senior Member
My $0.02:
Yeah, there is that falsity of "pros" or at least "the good ones" are shooting in manual only and a beginner wanting to emulate that. It takes skill to do so and there's an inherent stigma nowadays against being a "Beginner", "Neophyte", or "nOOb". It doesn't help when you have people who are more "in the know" than the beginner who show their superiority complex by stating such bilge as "if you're gonna shoot auto just stay with your P&S" or "Pros use Manual". It is detrimental. Everyone learns differently and IMHO those in the know should be cultivating best results, not "since it works for me it's the only way anyone with any photographic worth should do it". If they get a great shot on full auto, they still had to compose the shot, and that does deserve some bonus points over a badly composed photo with an "ideal" exposure done manually.
Personally, I look at 2 regimes when I shoot: it's either "Gotta get the shot" or "Fooling around/experimenting". If it's a "gotta get the shot" regime, there should be no shame or stigma in shooting in an auto or semiauto (A or S) mode. Why? You gotta get the shot and 95% of the time, an auto or semi auto mode will get you close enough to the normal exposure that you just need to worry about composition. For fooling around, yes, go full manual if you desire but expect failure as an option--and there's no stigma against failure in that regime--you're experimenting. If it doesn't work, you know it doesn't work. If it works, then congrats! File that away as something that works. If nothing works manually, shoot it in auto and figure out what your camera did, and use that as a jump-off point.
At least that's my opinion.
P.S. Photography is not the only field where "manual only" is a mantra. In some car enthusiast circles you'll get Honda Civic enthusiasts calling a Corvette a "Grocery Getter" with disdain simply because it has an automatic transmission, while their Civic is a stickshift--even though that "Grocery Getter" Corvette would already have finished a 1/4mile drag race by the time their Civic has fully released the clutch.
Yeah, there is that falsity of "pros" or at least "the good ones" are shooting in manual only and a beginner wanting to emulate that. It takes skill to do so and there's an inherent stigma nowadays against being a "Beginner", "Neophyte", or "nOOb". It doesn't help when you have people who are more "in the know" than the beginner who show their superiority complex by stating such bilge as "if you're gonna shoot auto just stay with your P&S" or "Pros use Manual". It is detrimental. Everyone learns differently and IMHO those in the know should be cultivating best results, not "since it works for me it's the only way anyone with any photographic worth should do it". If they get a great shot on full auto, they still had to compose the shot, and that does deserve some bonus points over a badly composed photo with an "ideal" exposure done manually.
Personally, I look at 2 regimes when I shoot: it's either "Gotta get the shot" or "Fooling around/experimenting". If it's a "gotta get the shot" regime, there should be no shame or stigma in shooting in an auto or semiauto (A or S) mode. Why? You gotta get the shot and 95% of the time, an auto or semi auto mode will get you close enough to the normal exposure that you just need to worry about composition. For fooling around, yes, go full manual if you desire but expect failure as an option--and there's no stigma against failure in that regime--you're experimenting. If it doesn't work, you know it doesn't work. If it works, then congrats! File that away as something that works. If nothing works manually, shoot it in auto and figure out what your camera did, and use that as a jump-off point.
At least that's my opinion.
P.S. Photography is not the only field where "manual only" is a mantra. In some car enthusiast circles you'll get Honda Civic enthusiasts calling a Corvette a "Grocery Getter" with disdain simply because it has an automatic transmission, while their Civic is a stickshift--even though that "Grocery Getter" Corvette would already have finished a 1/4mile drag race by the time their Civic has fully released the clutch.